User-De-centeredness in Service Design

Yutaka Yamauchi

    Publikation: Bidrag til bog/antologi/rapportKonferencebidrag i proceedingsForskningpeer review

    Abstract

    User-centeredness is a fundamental principle of design in general and of service design in particular. The current paper offers an alternative view of this concept. Here, the “user” is seen not as a self-evident and static subject that is firmly centered but as part of a performative interaction through which the subject is transformed―i.e., the subject is de-centered. As service involves users as people and not as objects, the agency of persons involved needs to be fully acknowledged. Based on previously reported empirical studies of service encounters, this study proposes the thesis that service should be seen as a “struggle” rather than harmonious totality. The subject “user” is an outcome of this struggle, not its a priori condition. Therefore, a dialectical process by which the subject develops must be designed. This perspective allows for design that is different from, or even opposite to, user-centered design. This paper discusses the theoretical framework and key design principles of user-decentered service design.
    OriginalsprogEngelsk
    TitelServiceology for Designing the Future : Selected and Edited Papers of the 2nd International Conference on Serviceology
    RedaktørerTakashi Maeno, Yuriko Sawatani, Tatsunori Hara
    UdgivelsesstedTokyo
    ForlagSpringer
    Publikationsdato2016
    Sider583-594
    ISBN (Trykt)9784431558590
    ISBN (Elektronisk)9784431558613
    DOI
    StatusUdgivet - 2016
    Begivenhed2nd International Conference on Serviceology. CServ 2014 - Yokohama, Japan
    Varighed: 14 sep. 201416 sep. 2014
    Konferencens nummer: 2
    http://icserv2014.serviceology.org/

    Konference

    Konference2nd International Conference on Serviceology. CServ 2014
    Nummer2
    Land/OmrådeJapan
    ByYokohama
    Periode14/09/201416/09/2014
    Internetadresse

    Emneord

    • Service design
    • User-de-centered
    • Service as struggle
    • Dialectics

    Citationsformater